Turkey And Syria Rocked By Massive Earthquake, More Than 1,000 People Reported Dead

Turkey And Syria Rocked By Massive Earthquake, More Than 1,000 People Reported Dead

A strong earthquake, clocking in at 7.8 magnitude, hit southern Turkey early Monday morning, downing thousands of buildings in the region while people slept. A second one, almost as powerful, hit 12 hours later. 

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced that 2,818 buildings in total had collapsed due to the initial quake in Turkey, according to CNBC.

Erdogan tweeted that search and rescue teams were immediately dispatched to affected areas within the country. Erdogan also noted that in Turkey, the initial quake killed 912 and wounded 5,385 people, calling it “biggest disaster” to strike the country since the 1939 Erzincan earthquake, CNBC reported.

The initial quake struck approximately 20 miles from the city of Gaziantep at a depth of 11 miles and could reportedly be felt in Lebanon and Syria, NBC News reported. Aftershocks were felt in the minutes after the initial quake, the strongest of which clocked in at a 6.7 magnitude. (RELATED: Huge Earthquake Felt Across Multiple Nations)

Journalist Eyad Kourdi, a resident of Gaziantep, told CNN there were at least eight “very strong””aftershocks after the initial 7.8 magnitude quake struck, adding that many of his neighbors fled their homes in the aftermath.

Gaziantep Gov. Davut Gul pleaded with residents not to panic and to keep roadways clear.

“Please let’s wait outside without panic. Let’s not use our cars. Let’s not crowd the main roads. Let’s not keep the phones busy,” he said.

Gov. Erdinc Yilmaz of the Osmaniye province in southern Turkey told state media, according to The New York Times, that 34 buildings had collapsed in his province with five confirmed dead. Gov. Salih Ayhan of the Sanliurfa province told CNN that 12 people have been confirmed dead in his province.

In Syria, state media reported that the power of the quake caused buildings to collapse in the major cities of Aleppo and Hama, according to NBC News.

“The situation is disastrous,” said a spokesperson for first responders in Syria, according to The Washington Post. The spokesman continued that they have evacuated the deceased and wounded already, but an unknown number of people are still trapped in the rubble. Syrian state media reported that 371 deaths occurred with the initial quake and 1,089 people were injured, according to CNBC.

Emergency rooms of Syrian American Medical Association (SAMS) hospitals in northwest Syria were full.

In Lebanon, buildings shook for 40 seconds, prompting residents to leave their beds and drive away from their homes and buildings, the outlet stated.

Dr. Susan Hough of the U.S. Geological Survey likened the power of this quake to that of the 1906 earthquake that devastated San Francisco. Hough noted that while there have been more powerful quakes in the past 20 years, the shallowness of this particular quake is not common and made it particularly disastrous and far-reaching.

The second quake clocking in at 7.6 magnitude hit an already besieged southern Turkey within 12 hours of the first quake, hampering search and rescue efforts, CNBC reported.

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